For generations, science fiction stories have used mankind’s inclination towards innovation to tell stories of all stripes - from the inspiring to the terrifying. This extends to the big screen, too.
Sci-fi anime has always been a time capsule. From the late 1970s through the early 2000s, creators were obsessed with ...
DC Comics is home to some of the most exciting and compelling comic book characters and stories that the medium has ever had, and while they all fit within a myriad of genres and sub-genres, one of ...
Pradeep Khadka’s screen time does little to impact the story, making his casting feel more like a promotional strategy than a ...
So, in no particular order, here they are: New Scientist’s favourite science fiction books of all time. We’d love to hear from readers, too, about your own favourite sci-fi. Join the conversation on ...
Real-world technology is often foretold by science fiction. In 1927, characters in the film Metropolis made video calls to each other. Star Trek creator Gene Roddenberry hung flat-screen color ...
Jeffrey Weinzweig's Contraptions offers readers a thrilling journey through a world of espionage, betrayal, and advanced technology. Among the novel's many intriguing elements are the cutting-edge ...
Science fiction allows artists to speculate about the future through imaginative and technical concepts. But so often the prevailing vision of that future in popular culture tends toward the dystopian ...
Tech companies are claiming machines more intelligent than us and capable of having their own agendas are just around the ...